Amuse,
I sympathise with your position. It seems that you maybe sympathise with mine. I often wonder why I feel driven to criticise religion. And when I reflect upon this, I find that my thoughts take me into further criticism. Only recently, for instance, I was thinking about how people can still have faith despite the world's great atrocities like the gulag and the holocaust, and how people can feel that it was OK for God to abstain from action in these events. I mean for me, the gulag and the holocaust are examples of man's inhumanity to man. But if you believe in God, you have to somehow justify his inactivity, don't you? On Jan 20th 1942, a meeting of around 16 or so Nazis determined the fate of around 6 million Jews. Now imagine, in a war situation like WWII, how easy it would be to eradicate 16 people and make it look like it was either accidental, natural or a result of the conflict. So it would seem that God did not want these 16 people to die. Without them, it is probable that the Final Solution would not have occurred. It takes a great deal of planning and organisation to kill 6 million people. Now, 6 million divided by 16 = 375,000. That, it would appear, is the value God has placed on the lives of these 16 Nazis. They are equivalent to the lives of 375,000 Jews. Is this not an intolerable position that God is in? He allows 6 million Jews to die, and yet doesn't orchestrate the death of 16 Nazis? And, let us suppose that God sent a messenger to assess the state of affairs at the Nuremberg trials. Would he have said, well done guys, these Nazis deserve this, it is only justice? or would he have said, did I not give a commandment unto you Thou Shalt Not Kill?
Of course, the argument I am familiar with from Christians, is that God does not wish to tamper with reality, to interfere with freewill. Yet those same Christians would have me believe that when Julie, or John got that job they were going for last week, it was thanks to prayer, and the interference of God in the world. God is supposed to do all kinds of works that would appear to interfere with freewill and reality. Yet, despite the great amount of prayer that must have occurred during World War II, his love seems pretty much absent. Am I really to believe that God protected 16 Nazis that devised the deaths of 6 million Jews, because he did not wish to interfere with freewill? Or am I to believe there is no God, just a propensity within mankind to perpetrate atrocities and unimaginably cruel acts?
You see what happens when I take the idea of God seriously?


- that sounds simplistic. as well, i imagine, heretic - ah well.



